SEATTLE--
Eugenie Scott, a designated spokesperson for the WGBH series, 'Evolution'
on PBS has charged that scientific critics of the series are mainly
motivated by "religious beliefs" and can safely be dismissed
as "creationists."

Scott,
executive director of the National Center for Science Education (NCSE)
and one of the key spokespeople chosen by PBS producers to defend the
seven-part series that starts next Monday, said in a September 17 press
release that "virtually every reputable scientist in the world
argues that evolution is good science."

Her organization
is an interest group that exists to promote the teaching of Darwinism
and which routinely opposes criticism of Darwinian theory, including
scientific criticism.

The NCSE
press release specifically attacked a September 10 press release by
Discovery Institute, which described a scientific error in the 'Evolution'
series.

Discovery
today published a 154 page "Viewer's
Guide" to the series, available online at http://www.reviewevolution.com.
It presents this and many other examples of scientific errors and omissions
that scientists affiliated with Discovery have identified in the program.

"The
Evolution series makes a very selective presentation of the scientific
evidence," said Stephen Meyer, a geophysicist and Cambridge-educated
philosopher of science who directs the Discovery science program. "The
Evolution series has many factual errors as well as errors of omission.
It also denies the public the opportunity to hear from scientists who
have alternative interpretations of the biological evidence. PBS has
erected the journalistic equivalent of a Potemkin village where scientific
dissent-which is real and growing-is kept out of sight."

"Scientists
who dare question Darwin's theory and who find errors in the series
on evolution apparently are not 'reputable' in the mind of the series'
spokesperson," said Bruce Chapman, president of Discovery Institute.
"To be 'reputable' is to be a Darwinian and vice versa. This is
tautological thinking."

"Dr.
Scott imagines that she can read the minds and motivations of critics.
Though the critics she dismisses have advanced degrees in relevant scientific
disciplines, and though their critiques are based upon scientific evidence,
she still routinely dismisses them as religiously motivated. But her
ad hominem charge is false. It's also irrelevant. Would she concede
that the motives or religious beliefs of Darwinists were relevant in
assessing their scientific claims?"

Quoting
biologists Michael J. Behe and Jonathan Wells, Discovery Institute's
September 10 press release detailed just one of the series' scientific
errors: the claim that the genetic code-the way DNA specifies protein
structure-is the same in all organisms, and that this universality provides
"powerful evidence" that all living things "evolved on
a single tree of life." Yet scientists have known for decades that
the genetic code is NOT universal. The National Institutes of Health
even maintains a web site that lists the growing number of exceptions
to it.

In response,
on September 17, the NCSE quoted another biologist, James Hanken, who
called the statement by Behe and Wells "bizarre beyond belief."
Another biologist, Norman Pace, dismissed "variants" to the
universality of the genetic code on the grounds that they occur in organisms
"known to have derived from organisms that had the standard code."

Yet this
statement by an NCSE spokesman clearly concedes that the genetic code
is not universal. Pace acknowledges that "variants" exist.
Why, then, does Hanken claim that it is "bizarre beyond belief"
for two scientists to point this out?

Pace's
statement also begs the question. How do we know that organisms with
variant codes are "derived" from organisms that had the standard
code? Pace merely assumes that these variants evolved from simpler organism
with the standard code. But these supposed organisms are extinct, and
we don't have their DNA. Moreover, many molecular geneticists doubt
that any organism could survive an alteration in its genetic code. Pace
merely assumes the point at issue-namely, existence of a universal common
ancestor and code-and then uses that assumption to explain away troublesome
evidence.

In any
event, both sides agree that the genetic code is NOT universal. 'Evolution'
says it is. Therefore, the series contains a serious scientific mistake,
indeed, one that has the effect of overstating the scientific evidence
in support of Darwinism. "It is disturbing that when scientific
critics point out an error in the Evolution series," Wells notes,
"Scott and the NCSE attack the critics even as they implicitly
concede the substance of their factual critique. They should have just
said, 'We were wrong.' Instead, they once again obscure their concession
with an ad hominem attack."

Founded
in 1990, Discovery Institute is a non-profit, non-partisan public policy
center for national and international affairs. Its programs deal with
a range of issues, including science, technology, regional development,
environment, and defense. More information about the Institute and its
activities can be found at www.discovery.org.